⭐ Consumer Caution
Consumer Caution – GSR Consultant FZE (Main license) / GSR Immigration Law Services Dubai
Based on my experience, I encountered multiple serious concerns:
No verifiable RCIC, MARA, or IAA license under the company’s name, nor through any confirmed physical offices in Canada, Australia, or New Zealand.
For New Zealand, clients are told their CVs are being “marketed” through Seek, which anyone can apply to independently. The stated timeline is approximately nine months, yet to my knowledge none of the enrolled clients have received a job offer. This can be independently confirmed by speaking with other clients.
Excessive fees, typically AED 5,250–6,300, for services that applicants can legally complete themselves.
Strict non-refundable payment terms, even when progress is unclear.
The company operates under two UAE free-zone licenses (Ajman Free Zone and Meydan Free Zone), both listing Gursimran Singh as manager/owner, with the rest of the team presented as employees. These are business consultancy licenses and do not authorize regulated or legal immigration services. The individual listed is not registered with IRCC, MARA, or IAA.
Intimidation when concerns were raised. Multiple enrolled clients report being threatened with references to UAE cybercrime laws when asking for progress after 1–2 years or requesting refunds. Contracts appear to heavily favor the company.
A “processing team” is referenced, headed by Miss Sadia, but in my experience this function appears limited to handling escalations rather than delivering measurable outcomes. After contractual timelines elapsed, clients were reportedly issued revised contracts changing terms or substituting programs (e.g., visit visas), despite clients having already paid for assessments such as ECA/IQA or skills assessments themselves.
Individuals presented publicly as sales director and branch manager/HR appear to be real owners under verifiable documents; however, these roles do not replace required immigration licensing. If licensed, credentials should be provided under their own names.
I’m sharing this based on my experience to encourage others to independently verify credentials and legal authority through official government registers (which are free to check) before engaging any immigration consultancy.






